The first settlers in Japan came from the mainland of Asia. Historians are not sure exactly where they came from or when. Probably, many different waves of people arrived at different times from different regions.
The first wave of settlers most likely came during the Ice Age, which ended about 11,000 years ago. Sea levels were lower then. Land bridges linked Japan with Korea in the south and with Siberia in the north. Some settlers may have migrated to Japan by land. Later migrants probably came by boat and traveled from island to island. The earliest inhabitants survived mainly by hunting and fishing.
By about 300 b.c., another group of settlers had arrived from Asia. Their culture included skill in working iron and bronze. They also knew how to weave cloth. Most importantly, they introduced a new farming technique: growing rice in irrigated fields. Rice soon became Japan's most important crop.
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japan is a developed country.but that place has more chance to get earth quakes,sunamies etc....
so people migrate from japan
One who is fasciniated by Japan is likely to attempt an Immigration process to be able to live there.
There aren't a lot of people who immigrate to Japan, though.
The Jomon people got to Catalina Island, off the coast of Los Angeles, in small boats in 11,000 BC.
fishing industry
Because they loved the land and yeah
The people of the Jomon period were the indigenous populations of Japan who lived from around 14,000 to 300 BCE. They were known for their distinctive pottery with cord-marked decoration, as well as their semi-sedentary hunter-gatherer lifestyle. The Jomon people are considered one of the earliest cultures in Japan.
jomon
jomon
They lived close near the oceans of Japan
13530 B.C> from Shambala.................................
Jomon
Japan's culture begins all the way back in the prehistoric Jomon period, and includes influences of Europe and North America as well as Asia. The predominant religion is Shinto.
Tokyo's settlement pattern is linear in urban areas and dispersed in rural areas.
The name "Jomon" does not have a specific meaning because it is not of a specific origin. It could be a variant of the name "Ramon" which means "wise protector" in Spanish. However, without more information on the origin or cultural context of the name "Jomon," it is difficult to determine its exact meaning.
jomon's daughter
Old Answer: vanceNew Answer: Japan has been inhabited for quite some time. Stone Age humans arrived in Japan some where around 30,000 B.C.E., a date derived from testing of flint tools found on the islands, via a land bridge that once connected Kyushu to the Korean peninsula. It was around 10,000 B.C.E. that those people began develop an identifiable culture. Called the Jomon, they were unique in the fact that they learned to craft pottery while they were Mesolithic people, an art which is generally believed to have developed during the Neolithic age. In fact, Jomon pottery is believed to be some 2,000 years older than Mesopotamian pottery.It wasn't until around the third century B.C.E. that the Jomon were introduced to people not from their islands. The Yayoi emigrated from what is now Korea to the Japanese islands due to a large wave of migrating people out of Northern China. From here there are several theories about what happened to the Jomon people that range from a combination of the Jomon and Yayoi people to the Yayoi replacing the Jomon completely.
they made lots of pottery and jomon means cord patterned. this refers to markings on there pottery. last the people were hunter-gathers.